LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Los Angeles
Clippers co-owner Donald Sterling on Tuesday sparred with his estranged
wife's attorney at a trial over the $2 billion sale of the NBA
franchise, interrupting and shouting during testimony and saying he
wants to keep the team for financial reasons.

The 80-year-old real estate billionaire, who has been deemed by
physicians to have Alzheimer's disease and is unable to handle
business affairs, said he was blocking the sale brokered by his wife
to former Microsoft Corp Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer
because he believed the team's value could be more than double.

"I think we can get somewhere between $2.5 to $5 billion for that
team," Sterling said, adding that rising television and media rights
made the team more valuable to keep.

It is the first time Sterling has spoken publicly since a televised
interview in May shortly after he was banned from the NBA for life
for taped racist remarks that were made public.

Sterling had difficulty recalling dates and remembering past
statements a day after he failed to appear when called to take the
stand. He fought with celebrity attorney Bert Fields, repeatedly
asking the lawyer his name.

An agitated Sterling, who often disputed Fields's questions, snapped
at the lawyer: "Tell me if that's relevant, if you're not trying to
be a smart ass."

"I think it showed you what this man is really like," Fields said
outside court. "It showed you the enormous hypocrisy of this guy,
who will spout all these things about how he loves his wife, but
he's suing her."

Shelly Sterling, 79, has asked Los Angeles Superior Court Judge
Michael Levanas to confirm her as the sole trustee of the family
trust that owns the Clippers and to back the NBA-record deal.

'WIFE CAN'T LEARN ANYTHING'

At issue is whether Shelly Sterling properly removed her husband as
trustee after he was deemed by physicians to have early Alzheimer's
disease and unable to handle business affairs.